Introduction

This chapter forms the basis of the discussion into mechanical waves. Waves are all around us, even though most of us are not aware of it. The most common waves are waves in the sea, but waves can be created in any container of water, ranging from an ocean to a tea-cup. Waves do not only occur in water, they occur in any kind of medium. Earthquakes generate waves that travel through the rock of the Earth. When your friend speaks to you he produces
sound waves that travel through the air to your ears. Light is made up of electromagnetic waves. A wave is simply moving energy.

What is a
medium ?

In this chapter, as well as in the following chapters, we will speak about waves moving in a medium. A medium is just the substance or material through which waves move. In other words the medium carries the wave from one place to another. The medium does not create the wave and the medium is not the wave. Therefore the medium does not travel with the wave as the wave propagates through it. Air is a medium for sound waves, water is a medium for water waves and rock is a medium for earthquakes (which are also a type of wave). Air, water and rock are therefore examples of media (media is the plural of medium).

Medium

A medium is the substance or material in which a wave will move.

In each medium, the atoms that make up the medium are moved
temporarily from their rest position. In order for a wave to travel, the different parts of the medium must be able to interact with each other.

What is a
pulse ?

Investigation : observation of pulses

Take a heavy rope. Have two people hold the rope stretched out horizontally. Flick the rope at one end only once.

What happens to the disturbance that you created in the rope? Does it stay at the place where it was created or does it move down the length of the rope?

In the activity, we created a
pulse . A pulse is a
single disturbance that moves through a medium. In a transverse pulse the displacement of the medium is perpendicular to the direction of motion of the pulse.
[link] shows an example of a transverse pulse. In the activity, the rope or spring was held horizontally and the pulse moved the rope up and down. This was an example of a transverse pulse.

Pulse

A pulse is a single disturbance that moves through a medium.

Transverse Pulse

A pulse where all of the particles disturbed by the pulse move perpendicular (at a right angle) to the direction in which the pulse is moving.

Pulse length and amplitude

The amplitude of a pulse is a measurement of how far the medium is displaced momentarily from a position of rest. The pulse length is a measurement of how long the pulse is. Both these quantities are shown in
[link] .

Amplitude

The amplitude of a pulse is a measurement of how far the medium is displaced from rest.

Example of a transverse pulse

The position of rest is the position the medium would be in if it were undisturbed. This is also called the equilibrium position. Sometimes people will use rest and sometimes equilibrium but they will also use to the two in the same discussion to mean the same thing.

Investigation : pulse length and amplitude

The graphs below show the positions of a pulse at different times.

Use your ruler to measure the lengths of
a and
p . Fill your answers in the table.

Time

a

p

t=0 s

t=1 s

t=2 s

t=3 s

What do you notice about the values of
a and
p ?

In the activity, we found that the values for how high the pulse (
a ) is and how wide the pulse (
p ) is the same at different times.
Pulse length and
amplitude are two important quantities of a pulse.

Pulse speed

Pulse Speed

Pulse speed is the distance a pulse travels per unit time.

In
Motion in one dimension we saw that speed was defined as the distance traveled per unit time. We can use the same definition of speed to calculate how fast a pulse travels. If the pulse travels a distance
D in a time
t , then the pulse speed
v is:

v=Dt

A pulse covers a distance of
2m in
4s on a heavy rope. Calculate the pulse speed.

Determine what is given and what is required

We are given:

the distance travelled by the pulse:
D=2m

the time taken to travel
2m :
t=4s

We are required to calculate the speed of the pulse.

Determine how to approach the problem

We can use:

v=Dt

to calculate the speed of the pulse.

Calculate the pulse speed

v=Dt=2m4s=0,5m·s-1

Write the final answer

The pulse speed is
0,5m·s-1 .

The pulse speed depends on the properties of the medium and not on the amplitude or pulse length of the pulse.

Pulse speed

A pulse covers a distance of
5m in
15s . Calculate the speed of the pulse.

A pulse has a speed of
5cm·s-1 . How far does it travel in
2,5s ?

A pulse has a speed of
0,5m·s-1 . How long does it take to cover a distance of
25cm ?

How long will it take a pulse moving at
0,25m·s-1 to travel a distance of
20m ?

The diagram shows two pulses in the same medium. Which has the higher speed? Explain your answer.

fullerene is a bucky ball aka Carbon 60 molecule. It was name by the architect Fuller. He design the geodesic dome. it resembles a soccer ball.

Tarell

what is the actual application of fullerenes nowadays?

Damian

That is a great question Damian. best way to answer that question is to Google it. there are hundreds of applications for buck minister fullerenes, from medical to aerospace. you can also find plenty of research papers that will give you great detail on the potential applications of fullerenes.

Tarell

Join the discussion...

what is the Synthesis, properties,and applications of carbon nano chemistry

Yeah, it is a pain to say the least. You basically have to heat the substarte up to around 1000 degrees celcius then pass phosphene gas over top of it, which is explosive and toxic by the way, under very low pressure.